A cannon is fired horizontally from atop a 40.0 m tower. The cannonball travels 175 m horizontally before it strikes the ground. With what velocity did the ball leave the muzzle?

Vx = (175 m)/(time to fall)

Time to fall = sqrt(2 H/g) = 2.86 s

Solve for Vx

how did u calculate "time to fall". and what is H and g in the equation:

sqrt(2 H/g) = 2.86 s?

To find the initial velocity of the ball, we can use the equations of motion. Since the cannonball was fired horizontally, we know that its vertical velocity is 0 m/s when it leaves the muzzle.

We can use the following equation to find the time it takes for the cannonball to reach the ground:

h = (1/2) * g * t^2

Where h is the height of the tower (40.0 m), g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s^2), and t is the time taken.

Rearranging the equation, we have:

t = sqrt((2 * h) / g)

Plugging in the values, we get:

t = sqrt((2 * 40.0) / 9.8)

t ≈ 2.02 seconds

Now that we have the time, we can find the horizontal velocity using the equation:

v = d / t

Where v is the velocity, d is the horizontal distance traveled (175 m), and t is the time taken (2.02 s).

v = 175 / 2.02 ≈ 86.63 m/s

Therefore, the ball left the muzzle with a velocity of approximately 86.63 m/s.